Forget AAA ray-traced video games or mining cryptocurrency—sometimes it feels like just running Chrome is one of the hardest tasks you can throw at PC. Google is apparently aware of Chrome's reputation for being a bit of resource hog, and on Windows, macOS, and ChromeOS, it's introducing two new features—Memory Saver and Energy Saver—which hope to keep your browser running a bit better on more limited machines.
Memory Saver is a mode you can toggle on and off at will, and Google says it will use "40 percent less memory" by kicking idle background tabs out of RAM. Google says, "any inactive tabs will be reloaded when you need them," which might mean losing your tab state, but you can turn this feature on and off whenever you want.
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The Memory Saver UI. [credit: Google ]
We haven't seen the stable channel rollout of this feature yet, but in the Canary nightly builds, an "Always keep these sites active" setting lets you protect domains from being hibernated, so there's a lot of control here. (It links to this bare-bones support page, if you're interested)
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Forget AAA ray-traced video games or mining cryptocurrency—sometimes it feels like just running Chrome is one of the hardest tasks you can throw at PC. Google is apparently aware of Chrome's reputation for being a bit of resource hog, and on Windows, macOS, and ChromeOS, it's introducing two new features—Memory Saver and Energy Saver—which hope to keep your browser running a bit better on more limited machines.
Memory Saver is a mode you can toggle on and off at will, and Google says it will use "40 percent less memory" by kicking idle background tabs out of RAM. Google says, "any inactive tabs will be reloaded when you need them," which might mean losing your tab state, but you can turn this feature on and off whenever you want.
-
The Memory Saver UI. [credit: Google ]
We haven't seen the stable channel rollout of this feature yet, but in the Canary nightly builds, an "Always keep these sites active" setting lets you protect domains from being hibernated, so there's a lot of control here. (It links to this bare-bones support page, if you're interested)
Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments
December 09, 2022 at 03:41AM
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